Aehr Test Systems' Q1 2026 Earnings Call: Contradictions Emerge on AI Processor Market Potential, Customer Engagements, and Flash Memory Outlook

Generated by AI AgentAinvest Earnings Call Digest
Monday, Oct 6, 2025 7:11 pm ET2min read
AEHR--
Aime RobotAime Summary

- Aehr Test Systems reported Q1 2026 revenue of $11M, a 16% YoY decline driven by lower sales and product mix shifts.

- Gross margin fell to 37.5% (vs 54.7% prior year) due to lower-margin prober sales and increased operating expenses.

- AI processor burn-in systems saw growth from hyperscaler demand, while silicon photonics upgrades doubled test capacity.

- Management expects AI-driven orders in H2 2026 but withheld formal guidance due to tariff uncertainties and customer evaluation timelines.

The above is the analysis of the conflicting points in this earnings call

Date of Call: October 6, 2025

Financials Results

  • Revenue: $11.0M, down $2.1M from $13.1M in the prior year (~16% YOY decline)
  • EPS: $0.01 per share (non-GAAP), down from $0.07 in the prior year
  • Gross Margin: 37.5% (non-GAAP), compared to 54.7% in the prior year

Business Commentary:

  • Revenue Performance and AI Demand:
  • Aehr Test Systems reported first quarter fiscal 2026 revenue of $11 million, although it was a $2.1 million decrease from $13.1 million in the same period last year.
  • The decline in revenue was partially due to lower sales volume and a less favorable product mix, with contactor revenues contributing only $2.6 million, which made up 24% of the total revenue, a significant drop from $12.1 million, or 92%, the previous year.

  • Financial Performance and Operational Expenses:

  • Aehr's non-GAAP gross margin for the first quarter was 37.5%, down from 54.7% year-over-year.
  • The decrease in gross margin was due to lower sales volume and a product mix that included lower-margin probers and an automated aligner.
  • Non-GAAP operating expenses increased to $5.9 million, an 8% rise from $5.5 million in Q1 last year, primarily due to higher development expenses.

  • AI Processor Burn-in and Testing:

  • Aehr's Sonoma ultra-high-power packaged part burn-in systems and consumables saw significant growth, driven by the qualification and production burn-in of AI processors.
  • This growth is attributed to hyperscalers expanding capacity and introducing new AI processors, with one significant customer placing multiple follow-on volume production orders.

  • Silicon Photonics Market Expansion:

  • Aehr experienced ongoing growth in the silicon photonics market, with an upgrade of a major customer's FoxXP systems to a higher-power configuration, doubling device test parallelism.
  • The expansion is driven by the adoption of optical chip-to-chip communication and optical network switching, which are increasing demand for Aehr's testing solutions.

Sentiment Analysis:

  • Results beat analyst expectations, but revenue declined YOY and gross margin fell to 37.5% from 54.7%. Management cited strong AI-driven engagement and orders but withheld formal guidance due to tariff-related uncertainty.

Q&A:

  • Question from Christian Schwab (Not specified): When will bookings materially improve to drive revenue?
    Response: Expect additional capacity orders from the first AI wafer‑level burn‑in customer this year; timing uncertain and likely second half; orders will be announced as received.

  • Question from Christian Schwab (Not specified): How many AI customers do you expect to be shipping to by fiscal year-end?
    Response: Targets are set for multiple additional AI customers across packaged and wafer-level; timing cautious, but management expects to capture several.

  • Question from Christian Schwab (Not specified): Will material AI orders land this fiscal year or later?
    Response: Confident orders will come; one evaluation aligns with volume production in 2H calendar 2026, implying tool orders before then; large production orders may arrive as evaluations conclude.

  • Question from Mark Schutter (Not specified): Do AI qualifications require a new product cycle and how risk‑averse are customers?
    Response: No new core product needed; adapt wafer pack pitch as needed; OSAT installs de‑risk adoption; buying typically aligns with new product transitions and capacity needs.

  • Question from Mark Schutter (Not specified): Why start with Sonoma (packaged) versus wafer‑level burn‑in?
    Response: AehrAEHR-- is neutral; customers use Sonoma for qual/production now and migrate to wafer‑level to avoid costly yield loss; Aehr is first with production wafer‑level solution and can quickly assess feasibility.

  • Question from Bradford Ferguson (Not specified): What is the cost of waiting to system‑level burn‑in?
    Response: Rack‑level burn‑in is inefficient and power‑intensive; wafer‑level enables higher temperature/voltage stress, faster screening, and far lower power/cost, improving yield economics.

  • Question from Bradford Ferguson (Not specified): Is your memory focus HBM or high‑bandwidth flash (HBF)?
    Response: Initial engagements skew to HBF; HBM also needs burn‑in; industry is scrambling to fix reliability, and Aehr’s high‑power wafer capabilities are differentiated.

  • Question from Bradford Ferguson (Not specified): Are SiC makers at risk if they skip burn‑in?
    Response: Yes; data shows SiC devices fail without burn‑in; OEMs enforce requirements; Aehr’s wafer‑level burn‑in cost is pennies per die, and rigorous adopters like onsemi have gained share.

  • Question from Larry Chlebina (Not specified): Does AMD’s news with OpenAI accelerate your second-processor evaluation?
    Response: Cannot comment on specifics; Aehr is engaged with all major suppliers, and broader processor momentum supports demand for its solutions.

  • Question from Larry Chlebina (Not specified): For optical I/O, are you selling new machines or upgrades?
    Response: Both; more upgrades and new systems, including integrated automation for hands‑free operation.

  • Question from Larry Chlebina (Not specified): Is the HBF opportunity with a new customer?
    Response: Same company with evolving requirements; new configuration is a superset and legacy tools won’t work, which could benefit Aehr.

Descubre lo que los ejecutivos no quieren que se conozca en las llamadas de conferencia

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